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"KölnTriangle (formerly also known as LVR-Turm) is a 103.2 metres (339ft.) tall building in Deutz, Cologne, and a prominent landmark in Cologne. The building was designed by Dörte Gatermann of Cologne-based architecture firm Gatermann & Schossig and completed in 2006. Its south facade consists of a double-facade, allowing natural ventilation even at high floors. Next to the high-rise structure, part of KölnTriangle is also a much larger 6-storey office block with a total gross floor area of 84.300 m².
KölnTriangle is headquarters of the European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA). The top floor and roof houses a publicly accessible observation deck with panorama views all over Cologne, in particular Cologne Cathedral, directly opposite the Rhine."
Source: wikipedia.org
"Bokrijk is a park and museum complex near the city of Genk in the Province of Limburg, Belgium. It is known for its open-air museum which displays a large collection of historical buildings from across Flanders, presenting the history of rural life in Belgium. The domain is 5.5 square kilometres in area and hosts an important botanical garden (arboretum)."
Source: wikipedia.org
Air intake structures are provided for the ventilation of the building.
Daniel Libeskind's "Kö-Bogen" Project: office and retail center in downtown Duesseldorf
CONTIN外景日
錄影的時候
旁邊剛好有一群來做晨間運動的婆婆媽媽
雖然看起來比較像晨間八掛放送電台
本來還擔心會不會他們聊太嗨
結果把他們的聲音給錄進去
一度還有很魔性的尖銳笑聲出現
沒想到開錄之後好像就沒有聲音了耶
原來是婆婆媽媽躲旁邊在偷看我們在錄什麼東西啦
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#婆婆媽媽的音量不是蓋的
#那個笑聲那麼大肺活量一定也很大
#喔呵呵呵呵呵呵呵呵呵呵
M3 with EF-M22mm f/2 STM
notice:
1. Taken with beta model (prototype).
2. Image has been resized. (80%)
3. It was taken at the bloggers meeting in Japan.
"Hamburg Airport (IATA: HAM, ICAO: EDDH), known in German as 'Flughafen Hamburg', is the international airport of Hamburg, the second-largest city in Germany. It is located 8.5 km (5.3 mi) north of the city center in the Fuhlsbüttel quarter and serves as a base for Germanwings, Condor and easyJet. Hamburg Airport is the fifth-busiest of Germany's commercial airports measured by the number of passengers and counted 15,610,072 passengers and 158,398 aircraft movements in 2015 and is named after Helmut Schmidt."
Source: wikipedia.org
In cooperation with the Heitsch Gallery in Munich, the Golf & Countryclub is hosting "Skulpturale Krefeld 01", a large sculpture exhibition featuring works by renowned international artists. The impressive sculptures by Albert Paley (USA), Herbert Mehler (Germany) or Julio Nieto (Spain), for example, can be seen in the area around the clubhouse from 27 May to 31 October 2018.
Information about the mill (wikipedia.de):
The mill, which is the largest in the Krefeld city area, is a tower windmill which stands on a brick base ring.
The mill was built in 1823 by Benjamin Schmitz. It was used as a mill until the 1930s and then remained inoperative for some time. With financial means of the city Krefeld the mill was repaired, however it was used for only a short time until 1941. During the Second World War, the surrounding area of the mill was hit several times during Allied air raids and the building was severely damaged. The wing movement was completely destroyed and only renewed in 1969 and another time in 1982. Today the mill is in a functional condition, but is not operated, but used as a clubhouse of a golf club and it accommodates a restaurant.
"The Hohenzollern Bridge (German: Hohenzollernbrücke) is a bridge crossing the river Rhine in the German city of Cologne (German Köln). It crosses the Rhine at kilometre 688.5. Originally, the bridge was both a railway and street bridge, however, after its destruction in 1945 and its subsequent reconstruction, it was only accessible to rail and pedestrian traffic.
It is the most heavily used railway bridge in Germany with more than 1200 trains daily, connecting the Köln Hauptbahnhof and Köln Messe/Deutz stations.
The bridge was constructed between 1907 and 1911 after the old bridge, the Cathedral Bridge (Dombrücke), was demolished. The Cathedral Bridge was unable to handle the increasing traffic in Cologne. It was named after the House of Hohenzollern."
Source: wikipedia.org
"Rheinbrücke Uerdingen", built in 1933-1936
The suspension bridge was opened as the "Adolf Hitler Rhine Bridge" in 1936; it replaced the ferry that had connected the opposite banks of the River Rhine before. In 1945 the bridge was destroyed by the German Army to keep the Allied Troops (WWII) from crossing the River Rhine. The reconstruction started in 1948 and ended in 1950. Restoration work on the bridge took place from 1984 to 1993 and in the year 2014.